Fire Tablet vs Samsung Galaxy Tab E Lite Comparison Review

Samsung released a new 7-inch Galaxy Tab E Lite a couple weeks ago. Initially it was priced at $119 but it’s already on sale for $99, which makes it the lowest priced Samsung tablet ever.

It’s still not nearly as cheap as Amazon’s 2015 Fire tablet, however. At $49.99 the entry-level Fire sells for half that, but to be fair it has ads at that price so a more comparable price is $64.99 for the non-ad version (there’s also a 16GB model available now for $59.99; $74.99 without ads).

The Galaxy Tab E Lite is very similar to the Fire tablet in terms of hardware. Both are almost the exact same size, both have similar screens and their overall specs are practically identical.

Like usual, the biggest difference between these two tablet brands comes down to the software.

The Galaxy Tab E Lite runs open Android 4.4 KitKat and includes all the usual Google apps and features out-of-the-box, and comes with Samsung’s added software features like multi-window mode, whereas Fire tablets run Amazon’s customized Android software that has more limitations, although it’s a lot better and more open than it used to be.

There’s also the new 7-inch Galaxy Tab A that replaced the Tab 4. It has a number of upgrades over the Tab E Lite and it’s only like $30 more. I’ll be posting a review and comparison of it next week as well.

Similar Features – Tab E Lite & $49 Fire

Both have 7-inch 1024 x 600 resolution screens (171 ppi).

They both have 8GB of internal storage, although the Fire has the option for 16GB.

The Fire’s reading app offers a couple extra features that aren’t found on the Samsung Kindle Android app, including text-to-speech and Word Wise (a learning tool that gives hints for difficult words).

It’s fairly easy to install the Google Play Store onto the newer Fire tablets, so that’s not as big of an advantage for Samsung as it used to be.

Samsung Galaxy Tab E Lite Advantages

The display is a bit clearer and brighter and there’s a wider range of brightness settings so you can set it super low for night reading.

There’s no onscreen menu bar since it has dedicated buttons so the viewing area is larger—makes a big difference, almost seems like the screen is a size larger.

Buttons: as mentioned above, there’s no navigation menu like with most Android devices because Samsung adds separate buttons for these. The home button is a physical button and the back and recent buttons are sensors, and all three have dual functions for long press and short press.

The speaker sounds clearer and it doesn’t get muffled when setting the tablet down flat.

Android 4.4.4 KitKat is more open and advanced, so it has more features like a fully customizable homescreen with support for widgets, you can change system font type, there are more camera modes and settings, it has voice search and speech-to-text (voice typing), etc.

Comes with Google apps and Play Store onboard, which has thousands of more apps available than Amazon’s appstore, and they get updated more frequently.

Can install Amazon’s Underground app to get access to the same apps and content available on Fire tablets.

The capacitive touchscreen supports 10-points touch to the Fire’s 5.

GPS support.

Wi-Fi Direct.

1 year warranty vs Fire tablet’s 90-day warranty.

Option for white color.

Run two applications at once side-by-side with Samsung’s multitasking feature (only works with some apps).

No sponsored screensavers and advertisements (costs $15 extra to remove them on Fire tablets).

I am responsible for purchasing 20 tablets for our adult students to use in the classroom. PODER offers English as a Second Language in Chicago.

We would be using the tablets to practice typing (with the use of a keyboard), browsing the internet… sites like inglesmundial.com for dictation, listening and reading) and hopefully be able to use Word or Excel or something similar.

We are non-profit and have a tight budget, but we need to invest in a tablet that will last and function in our lab. Tablets would be used for 2 hours a day and five days a week.

I am debating between purchasing either the $49 Fire, the Samsung Galaxy Tab A 7.0 or the Samsung Galaxy Tab E Lite 7.0.

The Tab A is the nicest of the lot but of course it’s quite a bit more expensive so it should be. The Tab E has lower specs and older software but it can still do the same things the Tab A can as far as web browsing, typing, etc. The Fire tablet is the cheapest route but it’s more restricted by Amazon so it can be harder to get certain apps to work unless you manually install the Google Play store, which may not always work because it’s unofficial.

Personally I find 10-inch tablets much better for things like typing and web browsing with the larger screen, and a tablet like the Lenovo TAB-X103F sells for less than the 7-inch Tab A so it’s something to consider.

You can also save money by getting refurbished tablets instead. There’s currently a selection of refurbished Samsung Galaxy Tablets at Woot, but the prices really aren’t that great. They were selling for less than that brand new a couple weeks ago when they were on sale for the holidays.